NHS hospital goes live with first open-source electronic record

Published: 8-Oct-2015

Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust works with software pioneer IMS MAXIMS to co-deliver digital integrated care record


Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust has become the first NHS hospital in the UK to go live with an open-source electronic patient record (EPR), a landmark move expected to help staff deliver better patient care through improved access to information.

Following the go-live, we believe we have developed a robust EPR system that can be replicated in other hospitals. This can deliver wide-reaching benefits across the NHS

The trust has successfully rolled out the system in A&E, theatres, outpatients and across 30 wards with the support of IMS MAXIMS, after the software firm released the code for its open-source EPR technology to the NHS just over a year ago.

Up until now NHS trusts have depended on proprietary software in order to record and manage patient information.

Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust has now made a significant move away from this approach and is using software called openMAXIMS to create accurate, accessible and integrated care records that will allow staff to support safer and more efficient care for patients attending the 600-bed Musgrove Park Hospital.

NHS England has endorsed an open software approach, saying it offers flexibility and freedom to NHS organisations to purchase systems, share innovation, speed up technology developments and foster more productive relationships between customers and suppliers.

Open-source technology has also been praised for encouraging doctors and nurses to become engaged in the deployment of major IT systems so that IT teams and developers can together design and implement software that meets the real clinical needs of the NHS organisation using it.

This represents a landmark moment in the use of open software in the NHS and validates the idea that open source can play a significant role alongside proprietary offerings

Dr Chris Swinburn, clinical lead for the project at the trust, said: “Our clinicians have been involved right from the start, from influencing the procurement of the software right through to the design of the system to suit our clinical needs and processes.

“We wanted to work with IMS MAXIMS because its system has been created over a long time within an NHS environment and developed alongside clinicians.

“Following the go-live, we believe we have developed a robust EPR system that can be replicated in other hospitals. This can deliver wide-reaching benefits across the NHS.”

Malcolm Senior, director of IT at the trust, added: “With the NHS looking to reduce the projected £30billion a year funding gap by 2020/21, there is now, more than ever, a clear requirement to make the most of precious hospital resources.

We want to move to a situation where clinicians can do everything on the computer, including viewing patient records, ordering tests, prescribing medication, making appointments and recording notes

“For me, openMAXIMS represents an affordable, flexible system that will deliver the functionality we need. Our clinicians have found it intuitive to use and have taken to it very well.”

Key functionality includes the patient administration system that will record the demographic details, scheduling and referral to treatment (RTT) status of the trust’s 500,000 patient visits each year.

In addition, theatre and anaesthetic departments will be able to update records digitally, much faster than previous paper-based processes.

The new technology has provided an opportunity to make processes for admission, transfer and discharge of patients more efficient and co-ordinated with the help of real-time bed management and discharge planning.

A reduced dependency on paper notes means the trust is working towards the national ambition within NHS England’s Five Year Forward View to ensure electronic health records are fully interoperable, supporting Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt’s challenge for the NHS to be paperless by 2018.

Richard Jefferson, head of programme commissioning at NHS England, said: “We are delighted to see the first deployment of openMAXIMS going live in an NHS hospital. This represents a landmark moment in the use of open software in the NHS and validates the idea that open source can play a significant role alongside proprietary offerings.

“The growing number of open-source communities, such as those within NHS England’s Code4health initiative, are an exciting opportunity to deliver innovation, quality and value through collaboration and are putting clinicians at the heart of decisions. openMAXIMS is a great example of this, and essential to its success has been the dedication and true partnership between Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust and IMS MAXIMS.”

Technology disruption is not a phrase closely associated with healthcare, but this proves there is a place for proven, safe, flexible software to add considerable clinical and administrative benefit to hospitals and their neighbouring care organisations

Patient data across emergency department, theatres, wards and outpatient departments was migrated from existing systems into the new openMAXIMS EPR within 48 hours.

The system has laid the foundation for the trust to move towards hospital-wide paper-lite working, starting with outpatient departments before moving on to developing apps for ward staff, clinical notes, e-Prescribing and interoperability with other NHS IT systems county-wide.

Senior said: “We have outpatient clinics in multiple settings around the county and we are currently moving over 60,000 sets of patient notes a month.

“We want to move to a situation where clinicians can do everything on the computer, including viewing patient records, ordering tests, prescribing medication, making appointments and recording notes.”

The go-live of openMAXIMS was preceded by an extensive training programme for 2,500 hospital staff including clinicians and administrative users. In addition a command centre with experts from IMS MAXIMS and the trust, as well a senior managers, was on hand 24/7 during the go live period.

Shane Tickell, chief executive of IMS MAXIMS, said: “This is a significant step for the next generation of clinical software. Technology disruption is not a phrase closely associated with healthcare, but this proves there is a place for proven, safe, flexible software to add considerable clinical and administrative benefit to hospitals and their neighbouring care organisations.”

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